Alabama State Personnel Board v. Hubbard

508 So. 2d 230, 1987 Ala. LEXIS 4295
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 15, 1987
Docket86-226, 86-227
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 508 So. 2d 230 (Alabama State Personnel Board v. Hubbard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alabama State Personnel Board v. Hubbard, 508 So. 2d 230, 1987 Ala. LEXIS 4295 (Ala. 1987).

Opinion

MADDOX, Justice.

These appeals involve the interpretation of a special legislative act regarding the pay scale of specified state employees and center around a dispute between the State Personnel Board and State Personnel Director, and two state employees who claimed they were eligible to receive a pay raise under the provisions of the act. The Board and the Director appealed.

The two employees, Martha F. Hubbard and Hazel Weaver, cross-appealed, claiming that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Dr. Halycon Ballard, the State Personnel Director, on their counterclaim filed against Dr. Ballard, in which they claimed that she violated their civil rights. That counterclaim was brought under the provisions of 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988.

The dispute between the parties involves the interpretation of Act No. 679,1978 Acts of Alabama, Regular Session, p. 983, which, in pertinent part, provides:

“Section 1. The Legislature finds that the state employee classification clerk-stenographer III is a unique position in state government. It carries the highest rating in its class and is consistently utilized as a major secretarial position for senior supervisors. Attainment of the position normally requires many years of service. This service clothes the occupant with considerable experience in state government which is a valuable asset to the state. The Legislature further finds that compensation for this position is not in keeping with the time and responsibilities involved.
“Section 2. Any clerk-stenographer III serving as a state employee subject to the merit system laws who has state service for twenty (20) years or more and who has been classified and served as a clerk-stenographer III for ten (10) years or more, and who has served or been classified at the highest pay step of clerk-stenographer III for five (5) years or more, shall be entitled to and be paid the same salary as the highest rated clerk IV in the state classified service.
“Section 3. The State Personnel Department Director shall, immediately upon this Act becoming a law, determine those individuals in state service who are eligible for such increased pay and shall amend or otherwise incorporate in its records or pay schedule so as to reflect the increase herein provided and shall certify the same to the state comptroller, who shall issue his warrants in accordance therewith. ...”

It is undisputed that the two employees met the following requirements on the dates indicated:

Martha Hubbard:
1. 20 years as a state employee: November 1981
2. 10 years as a clerk steno III: January 17, 1983
3. 5 years at the top pay step, clerk steno III: January 1, 1980.
Hazel Weaver:
1. 20 years as a state employee: September 13, 1980
2. 10 years as clerk steno III: October 23, 1984
3. 5 years at the top pay step, clerk steno III: October 23, 1979.

The State Personnel Board and the State Personnel Director interpreted the language of Section 2 of Act 679 to be conjunctive, and required that all three requirements be met by an employee simultaneously. Hubbard and Weaver challenged this interpretation and threatened a suit against the Board if it did not find [232]*232them to be eligible for the benefits provided by the Act. They claimed the Act provided that any clerk-stenographer III, who met all three criteria, whether simultaneously or not, would be eligible for the benefits provided for by the Act.

The Personnel Board’s interpretation of the Act is based upon the premise that the Legislature and the Personnel Board adopted a new Uniform Classification and Pay Plan in May 1982, and that before the date of the adoption of the new pay plan, each of the two aggrieved employees met only the first and third criteria under Act 679, and that after the adoption of the new pay plan each employee met only the first and second criteria under Act 679. The new pay plan enacted in 1982 added several pay steps, so that, although Hubbard and Weaver thereafter logged 10 years as clerk-steno Ill’s, they had not been at the top step of the new clerk-steno III pay range for five years.

When the two employees threatened to file a lawsuit, the Personnel Board filed an action in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, seeking a declaratory judgment interpreting Act 679.

Hubbard and Weaver answered the complaint, and also filed a counterclaim against the Board members individually, and against Dr. Halycon Ballard, the State Personnel Director, under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988, alleging that the Personnel Board’s interpretation of Act 679 and the State Personnel Director’s application of the Act under the Board’s rule denied them due process and equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Hubbard and Weaver also joined as additional counterclaim defendants the heads of the two departments where they work. A motion to dismiss the counterclaim against the individual Board members and Dr. Ballard, who were not plaintiffs in their individual capacities, was denied. Judge Gordon, after hearing testimony on the claims, ruled that Hubbard and Weaver were entitled to the salary benefits of the Act, and ordered back pay from its effective date. After Hubbard and Weaver had voluntarily dismissed their § 1983 action against all but Dr. Ballard, Judge Gordon granted summary judgment in favor of Dr. Ballard.

The trial court held a hearing on the complaint and entered the following memorandum opinion and order:

“The Alabama State Personnel Board, its director and members have filed a declaratory judgment action requesting that the Court determine if they are correct in their interpretation of 1982 Ala. Acts 679 as it applies to the employee-defendants, who are clerk-steno Ills in the state classified service.
“The Act provides that clerk-stenographer Ills (Clerk Ills) shall be paid at the top rate of pay for a Clerk IV if the Clerk III has (1) been in state service for twenty years, (2) ... been a Clerk III for ten years; and (3) ... been at the top pay level for a Clerk III for five years.
“HISTORY OF THE ACT
“Prior to the passage of Act 679 there were a substantial number of Clerk Ills who were at the top of their pay scale and could not advance in pay other than by receiving an across-the-board raise. Additionally, they could not advance to the higher job classification of Clerk IV because historically the Clerk IVs were confidential secretaries assigned only to department heads. Clerk Ills were assigned to division heads.
“The purpose of the Act was to provide a pay increase to long term Clerk Ills who were efectively stalled at the top of the Clerk III pay scale.1

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Bluebook (online)
508 So. 2d 230, 1987 Ala. LEXIS 4295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alabama-state-personnel-board-v-hubbard-ala-1987.